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'''Jolbon''' was the capital of a Korean tribal state which arose in the north of the Korean peninsula<ref>Jeon ho-tae, 《Koguryo, the origin of Korean power & pride》, Northeast Asia History Foundation, 2007. p.9</ref> Jolbon is thought to had been in modern [[Wunü Mountain]], [[Liaoning]].{{citation needed|date=August 2019}}
'''Jolbon''' was the capital of a Korean tribal state which arose in the north of the Korean peninsula<ref>Jeon ho-tae, 《Koguryo, the origin of Korean power & pride》, Northeast Asia History Foundation, 2007. p.9</ref> Jolbon is thought to had been in modern [[Wunü Mountain]], [[Liaoning]].<ref>{{cite journal |last=기|first=경량|date=2017|title=The location and character of Goguryeo's early capital, Jolbon|url=http://kiss.kstudy.com/search/detail_page.asp?key=3548910|journal=인문학연구|volume=34|issue=0|pages=129-162|access-date=2019-10-23 }}</ref>
In 37 BCE, [[Jumong]] had fled from [[Dongbuyeo]] to avoid death at the hands of Dongbuyeo's Crown Prince [[Daeso]], who presented great jealousy towards Jumong.<ref>Lim SK, 《Asian Civiizations:Ancient to 1800 AD》, Asiapac Books Pte Ltd, 2011. {{ISBN|9812295941}} p.77</ref> After he fled, Jumong established a new kingdom in 37 BCE called [[Goguryeo]] in the Jolbon region. In Jolbon, he married [[Soseono]] (or So Seo-no), who was the daughter of a local tribal leader.<ref>Pae-yong Yi, 《Women in Korean History》, 2008. p.120</ref>
In 37 BCE, [[Jumong]] had fled from [[Dongbuyeo]] to avoid death at the hands of Dongbuyeo's Crown Prince [[Daeso]], who presented great jealousy towards Jumong.<ref>Lim SK, 《Asian Civiizations:Ancient to 1800 AD》, Asiapac Books Pte Ltd, 2011. {{ISBN|9812295941}} p.77</ref> After he fled, Jumong established a new kingdom in 37 BCE called [[Goguryeo]] in the Jolbon region. In Jolbon, he married [[Soseono]] (or So Seo-no), who was the daughter of a local tribal leader.<ref>Pae-yong Yi, 《Women in Korean History》, 2008. p.120</ref>

Revision as of 22:59, 23 October 2019

Holbon
Hangul
Hanja
Revised RomanizationJolbon
McCune–ReischauerCholpon

Jolbon was the capital of a Korean tribal state which arose in the north of the Korean peninsula[1] Jolbon is thought to had been in modern Wunü Mountain, Liaoning.[2]

In 37 BCE, Jumong had fled from Dongbuyeo to avoid death at the hands of Dongbuyeo's Crown Prince Daeso, who presented great jealousy towards Jumong.[3] After he fled, Jumong established a new kingdom in 37 BCE called Goguryeo in the Jolbon region. In Jolbon, he married Soseono (or So Seo-no), who was the daughter of a local tribal leader.[4]

Jolbon was the first capital city of the ancient Korean Kingdom of Goguryeo from 37 BCE – 3 CE. [5] The second ruler, the son of Jumong, Yuri, moved its capital to Gungnae Fortress.[6]

References

  1. ^ Jeon ho-tae, 《Koguryo, the origin of Korean power & pride》, Northeast Asia History Foundation, 2007. p.9
  2. ^ 기, 경량 (2017). "The location and character of Goguryeo's early capital, Jolbon". 인문학연구. 34 (0): 129–162. Retrieved 2019-10-23.
  3. ^ Lim SK, 《Asian Civiizations:Ancient to 1800 AD》, Asiapac Books Pte Ltd, 2011. ISBN 9812295941 p.77
  4. ^ Pae-yong Yi, 《Women in Korean History》, 2008. p.120
  5. ^ Lee Injae, Owen Miller, Park Jinhoon, Yi Hyun-hae, 《Korean History in Maps》, Cambridge University Press, 2014. ISBN 1107098467 p.30
  6. ^ King Yuri(1) "KBS World", Retrieved 2015-06-27

See also